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lisa.r@bookwyrm.social

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Devil's Atlas (2021, Simon & Schuster, Limited) 4 stars

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4 stars

For lack of a better way to say this, the pictures were great! The information wasn't especially coherent and there were several chapters that the last paragraph or so were cut off, so thumbs down for copy editing. But the concept was neat and the array of historical paintings and artwork included was fascinating. I was expecting the book to mostly be about Hell or the devil but half of it was devoted to midworlds and heavens, so I guess the title itself is somewhat incoherent. Fun to have for reference if you are researching these topics.

The Blood of Flowers (Hardcover, 2007, Little, Brown and Company) 5 stars

In 17th-century Persia, a 14-year-old woman believes she will be married within the year. But …

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5 stars

If you have ever lived the experience of power-imbalanced relationships and had someone use you, and then smear your character or destroy opportunities because you weren’t submissive enough to them: this book validates you.

The carpets are the way to give herself power and freedom to rise above her circumstances, and during the design/creative process to give herself a voice.

The intricacies of her marriage are necessary to convey the confusion of what it is like to be on the underside of a relationship like this, where some things are still pleasing but the control is not.

The story is a little slow to get started and ends with a lot happening very quickly, but that is how life goes.

Heart wrenching and rich if you empathize with the story. The patriarchal structure is from another culture but many women in our current society right now are living through controlling …

Set Boundaries, Find Peace (2021, Penguin Publishing Group) 3 stars

The instant New York Times bestseller

End the struggle, speak up for what you need, …

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2 stars

I wanted to like Boundaries, but but I had to force myself to finish it. It is superficial and skimmed the surface, as though these issues would all correct themselves just as soon as you just talk to someone about how you feel. There’s an awkward looking away from the issue of trying to enforce boundaries with people who don’t want you to have any or won’t allow you to have them, or from addressing family systems who aren’t going to appreciate or understand your boundary setting.

If a book could be a blithely out of touch person who thinks your very complicated situation is super simple, this would be it.